Art Industry News: Germany Rescinds a Prize for Walid Raad Over the Artist’s Political Views + Other Stories

Art Industry News is a daily digest of the most
consequential developments coming out of the art world and art
market. Here’s what you need to know on this Wednesday, October
2. 

NEED TO READ

Ronald Lauder’s Lawsuit Against World War II Museum Tossed
– 
A judge dismissed billionaire Ronald Lauder’s lawsuit
against the Massachusetts-based International Museum of World War
II over a $25 million cache of memorabilia the collector purchased
back in 2018. Lauder claimed that the museum was “stonewalling”
him, by refusing to send him the property, which includes some
500,000 photographs and 1,650 posters, though he had previously
agreed to loan them to the museum through 2019. (ARTnews)

Teenager Named in Tate Modern Tragedy – The
teenager accused of pushing a six-year-old boy from the viewing
balcony of Tate Modern has been named now that he has turned
18. Jonty Bravery, who has not entered a plea, is due to
go on trial in London’s Old Bailey criminal court in February. The
victim, a French boy who was visiting London with his family,
survived the fall from the 10th-floor balcony. He is being treated
in a London hospital. This week, his family confirmed that he
cannot move his body or speak. “We see his efforts. He is very
brave. He keeps on smiling, and reacting to our jokes,” they said
in a statement via social media. (Daily
Mail
)

German City Withdraws Prize, Citing Politics
– 
Officials in the city of Aachen, Germany, have rescinded
a $10,000 prize awarded to artist Walid Raad because of his alleged
ties to the controversial Boycott, Divestment, and Sanctions (BDS)
movement. According to the city’s mayor, Marcel Philipp, research
showed that Raad was “a supporter of the BDS movement and has been
involved in various measures for the cultural boycott of Israel.”
In Germany, BDS has been officially deemed anti-Semitic, though the
Palestinian BDS National Committee contends that the move is
unconstitutional. Raad is known to have signed an open letter in
2014 that called on artists to withdraw from a show organized by an
art-related branch of the group. (ARTnews) 

The Aichi Triennale
Reopens Show, But Loses Government Grant – 
The hits
keep on coming for the Aichi Triennale, which has been dogged by controversy since it censored artworks depicting Japanese wartime
“comfort women,” despite ostensibly being a show about freedom of
artistic expression. The move caused many international artists
to withdraw or alter their work in protest of
the Triennale’s actions. The exhibition will reopen at the Aichi
Prefectural Museum of Art in Nagoya, though a grant providing about
$722,000 in support was revoked by the Agency for Cultural Affairs.
An agency source said it was due to procedure, not content.
(ArtAsiaPacifice-flux)

ART MARKET

Victoria Beckham Hosts an Andy Warhol Show With
Sotheby’s –
 Victoria Beckham helped wish Sotheby’s a happy
275th birthday with a party at her Dover Street store attended by
high-profile guests including KAWS, Takashi Murakami, and husband
David Beckham. The pop star-turned-fashion designer and art
collector previously hosted a pair of Old Master sales for the
auction house. This week’s selling exhibition
featured a dozen works by Pop art great Andy Warhol, on view
through October 4. (Press release)

eBay Launches #Artober With Sold-Out Yoshitomo Nara
Print –
 eBay for Charity marked the start of
#Artober, a month-long sales event featuring exclusive artworks,
with the release of Yoshitomo Nara’s lithograph Marching
on a Butterbur Leaf
. The $150 limited-edition print sold out,
with a portion of the proceeds going to the Dallas Contemporary.
The other works coming up for sale throughout the month include
a unicorn art object from Simone Legno, the Italian
artist who founded Japanese clothing and accessory brand tokidoki;
Carlos Rolón’s print Gild the Lily (Caribbean Azulejo);
and an ALL LI ES MATTER print from Hank Willis
Thomas, being sold to benefit the Public Art Fund. (eBay)

Wayne Thiebaud’s Mickey Mouse Heads to
Christie’s –
 The art collection of Walt Disney’s only
biological child, Diane Disney Miller, who died in 2003, and her
husband, Ron Miller, who died in February, will come to auction at
the American art sale at Christie’s New York in November. The sale
will feature work by Richard Diebenkorn, Milton Avery, and Wayne
Thiebaud, who were all associated with the famous animation
company, including a 1988 Thiebaud canvas titled Mickey
Mouse,
which depicts Disney’s most famous creation. Estimated
to sell for $400,000–600,000, the work bears the influence of the
artist’s apprenticeship as a Walt Disney Studios animator.
(Barrons)

Urs Fischer’s New Show
Is Named After Leonardo DiCaprio –
 When the art world
touches down in Paris for FIAC later this month, they’ll be treated
to a new exhibition from Urs Fischer at Gagosian that’s inspired by
none other than actor and art collector Leonardo DiCaprio. A source
close to the gallery claims that the show is dubbed simply “Leo,”
and that the titular work will likely be in the form of a candle.
(ARTnews)

COMINGS & GOINGS

Aspen Art Museum Director Quietly
Departs –
Heidi Zuckerman has left the Aspen Art Museum
after 14 years at the helm. The Aspen Times says
that
 no reasons for the move have been offered by
Zuckerman or the museum board since she announced her departure at
the end of June. (Aspen Times)

Juliana Ochs Dweck Named
Chief Curator of the Princeton University Art Museum –
The
Princeton University Art Museum has promoted Juliana Ochs Dweck, on
staff since 2010, from curator of academic engagement to the newly
created position of chief curator. The news comes ahead of a
planned three-year closure for the institution, which is erecting a
new building designed by David Adjaye. (Artforum)

Wolfgang Tillmans Named Chair of the ICA London –
The former Tate artist-trustee
Wolfgang Tillmans is the new chair of London’s Institute of
Contemporary Art. The gallery’s director
Stefan Kalmár says: “Times like these are times
for artists to lead.”
(Artforum)

FOR ART’S SAKE

Museo Jumex’s Duchamp/Koons Show Breaks Records  –
The artistic director of the New
Museum,
Massimiliano Gioni,
has helped smash the attendance record of the private museum in
Mexico City by curating a show that
 pairs work by Marcel Duchamp and Jeff Koons. The exhibition
drew more than 440,000 people in its five-month run.

(ARTnews)

You Can Now Wear Kurt
Cobain’s Art –
 Nirvana fans, rejoice! Kurt Cobain’s
doodles, drawings, and sculptures are coming to a whole range of
merchandise, including tee shirts and posters. The “Kurt Was Here”
collection will be available at Barney’s New York and online, with
proceeds from the KurtCobainShop.com going to support suicide
prevention and mental health support for teenagers. (Press
release
)

Gucci Mane Teams up With Gucci (the Fashion Label) and
Harmony Korine – 
How can you possibly document a
collaboration as epic as Gucci Mane x Gucci? By getting none other
than filmmaker Harmony Korine to shoot the photos. The two worked
together on Spring Breakers back in 2012, and are
joined by Sienna Miller and Iggy Pop in the Gucci Cruise 2020 ad
campaign. (Instagram)

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View this post on Instagram

 

Proud to announce my
#GucciCruise20 Collection with @gucci!!! Yo @alessandro_michele
this collection is crazy ! #HarmonyKorine dope visuals!
 #ComeAsYouAre_RSVP campaign for the #GucciCruise20 Collection
ITS GUCCI!!!!!!!!!!!!


A post shared by Gucci Mane
(@laflare1017) on Oct 1, 2019 at 6:38am PDT

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